Pandemic Pivot: Entrepreneurs Bob, Weave and Innovate

February 19, 2021

They鈥檙e the risk takers who bend their aspirations into viable businesses. 网曝黑料 has a long history of turning out entrepreneurs. In honor of National Entrepreneurship Week, we caught up with a few alumni to talk about their businesses, and how they鈥檝e adapted through COVID-19.

George Ramsay 鈥13 and Dean Williams 鈥11: Co-Founders of Bold Music

If your seven-year-old daughter wants to sing and play guitar like Taylor Swift, they鈥檝e got a teacher for that.

Teenage son wants to bring down the house with his drums? They鈥檝e got a guy for that, too.

George Ramsay and Dean Williams think of themselves as matchmakers. Their company, , matches aspiring musicians of all ages with compatible teachers. There鈥檚 no racing across town after school to make a 4 p.m. appointment. Teachers鈥攐f guitars, drums, pianos, flutes and so much more鈥攃ome to their students鈥 homes for lessons.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 really the important thing, we do the research and we鈥檙e vetting the teacher and the family,鈥 Ramsay said. 鈥淏y the time a teacher walks into someone鈥檚 home, they鈥檒l have a real good idea of what the family is like.鈥

Ramsay and Williams met at 网曝黑料 and bonded over their love for music. Ramsay, who majored in music, plays guitar and bass. He鈥檚 a member of a favorite 网曝黑料 alumni band, 鈥淥tis Wedding鈥 (formerly Green Eggs and Jam). As college students, he and Williams, a psychology major who plays piano and guitar, worked in a music store giving lessons to kids.

They decided they could make better music.

They started their business in 2013 as post-college housemates. Their living room became their company headquarters. Williams worked in a series of corporate jobs; Ramsay taught bass and guitar. Ramsay serves as Bold Music鈥檚 managing partner. They currently have about 400 students and 40 teachers on their rolls. Based in Charlotte, they launched their second Bold Music in Raleigh this past summer.

鈥淧eople have been taking and giving music lessons forever,鈥 Ramsay said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e making sure it鈥檚 done really, really well.鈥

鈥淣ot having a physical location allows us to pay teachers well and spend money on marketing,鈥 he added. 鈥淭hat puts a lot less financial pressure on us.鈥

One of their biggest challenges became one of their biggest strokes of luck. They schedule musicians with several appointments in the same area on the same day to save drive time. But busy kids and families will sometimes ask for a last-minute lesson time change. Ramsay proposed offering makeup lessons virtually. They trained the music teachers and introduced the students to their virtual model in early 2020.

鈥淲hen the pandemic hit, we already had the portal built and were able to flip the switch in a week,鈥 Williams said.

Their company now does a mix of in-person and virtual instruction.

Besides Ramsay, the company has two full-time employees who, among other things, help with marketing, scheduling and screening teachers and students to find the right match. They鈥檙e always looking for musicians to teach, with a caveat.

鈥淲e鈥檙e really strict about who we hire,鈥 Williams said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not enough to be just a great guitar player; we want the guitar player who鈥檚 also a great teacher and role model.鈥

Starting their business so soon after college鈥攖he 鈥渨hat do you have to lose?鈥 factor, Ramsay said鈥攈elped allay the fear of entrepreneurship. He urges others with a good idea and a sound business plan to consider the possibilities.

鈥淭rying something new is scary and you may fail,鈥 Ramsay said. 鈥淒o it anyway. Don鈥檛 let fear stop you from doing it.鈥

Endnote: Ramsay and Williams recently talked with Jay Hurt Hub Director Liz Brigham for the speaker series Hub and Spoke. . 

 

Jill Marcus 鈥86: CEO, Co-Founder and Managing Partner of and The Mother Earth Group 



Jill Marcus has spent most of her career creating special culinary experiences, from 500-person couture weddings and galas with high-end clients like the Prince of Dubai, to her farm-to-table restaurants Halcyon and Fern, to take-home comfort dinners from the local grocery store.

She and her business partner, Karen Teed, started cooking out of their home kitchen for friends鈥 parties as a sideline, then quit their corporate jobs and began their own company in 1989. The company grew, surviving lows like the Great Recession of 2008 and highs such as catering for 15,000 guests at the 2012 Democratic National Convention.

A strong economy kept their food ventures booming, including James Beard-nominated restaurant Halcyon, Flavors from the Earth housed in the Mint Museum in uptown Charlotte. In late 2019 the company bought a 16,000-square foot USDA kitchen to prepare for more growth.

When the pandemic forced businesses to shut down, Marcus was out of the country and had to turn to Zoom for the heart-wrenching job of laying off 150 employees. The bad news kept coming, with more than 200 weddings and corporate events postponed or canceled. In December, the restaurant group closed Halcyon, celebrating its 10 years in business by hosting three weekends of dinners served in individual, candle-lit greenhouses.

Yes, there were moments of curl-up-in-a-ball despair. And worries about paying bills and the impact on their employees. It forced her and Teed to take a hard look at their businesses.

Their team talked about having been stretched too thin before the pandemic. About the holidays spent celebrating with clients and not their own families. And how much they worked, having too little time off.

It鈥檚 been painful, but they innovated to stay afloat.

Government grants for small businesses have helped, and 鈥溚睾诹 taught me to do the research and think critically,鈥 Marcus said.

They started a Victory garden to grow their own herbs, garnish and produce. And now, they're entertaining several 鈥淕host Kitchen鈥 concepts, producing take-out meals for virtual brands. Throughout the pandemic, The Mother Earth Group never abandoned one of their core values, to nourish their community. They鈥檝e provided meals to their furloughed staff and those in need, Marcus said.

The big gatherings ended, but some went virtual and hired Something Classic to deliver cocktails, cheeseboards, and elegant small parties to attendees鈥 homes. The business took a more intimate turn by delivering creative dinner and drink experiences to private homes and micro-weddings. They celebrate everything from wanderlust dinners to Italian New Year's celebrations and Tiki Dinners to National Margarita Day. 

鈥淓very day鈥檚 a holiday at Something Classic,鈥 Marcus joked.

Their recent Mardis Gras dinner featured New Orleans cuisine and Hurricane cocktails with beads and masks included.

Marcus' world travel excursions over the years have inspired their at-home-themed menus.

鈥淎fter all these years, it still brings me joy to bring great experiences to our clients,鈥 Marcus said.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 travel to Spain right now; but we can bring Spain to you with some authentic tapas, paella kits, and rosemary pomegranate sangria. People are tired of cooking for themselves and are looking for a new way to celebrate life while they sequester at home.鈥

When the pandemic ends and the weddings and parties resume, she expects the company to rebound. And the now-closed restaurant space at the Mint Museum is currently under creative construction, no longer an anniversary dinner splurge but more of a swanky spot for cocktails, small plates and socializing.

鈥淔or all the hardships that 2020 dealt, it鈥檚 been a good year for us in some ways,鈥 Marcus said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e been given the gift of time after years of running a million miles an hour. I've learned to embrace change and transformation.鈥

Marcus plans to name the new restaurant Mariposa. That鈥檚 the Spanish word for butterfly, representing that transformation.

Whitney A. White 鈥08: Afara Global and Take Back Your Time

Whitney A. White started 2020 with a multitude of speaking, in-person training and client events booked for the year.

Then came COVID-19 and the cancellations. At first she felt devastated, but then realized how many others could use her help to retool their businesses. By year鈥檚 end she not only retained but expanded her client base.

鈥淭hese are crazy times. We鈥檙e seeing a shift in terms of the challenges everyone is facing,鈥 White said. 鈥淲hatever your business is, you need to adapt.鈥

Flexibility and freedom to be her own boss steered White into the entrepreneurial life. She鈥檇 spent her early career in management consulting but wanted a change. 

In 2011, White started , an innovation firm to help startup companies, corporate teams and non-profits develop new products and services. After becoming a mom in 2013, she struggled to balance parenthood and her visions for her business. She felt like she worked harder than ever and didn鈥檛 have time for much else. It鈥檚 a story she heard repeatedly from clients juggling careers, families and other obligations.

She developed an action plan for herself and over time, built her life to include more flexibility. She says she learned how to be the mom she wanted to be while also leading a thriving business. Her own journey led her to expand in 2018, with the coaching practice, Take Back Your Time. She focuses on helping people succeed without sacrificing the things they love to do.  (Saying no to tasks that don鈥檛 add value to your company or life is a big one. Saying yes to exercise or a soul-lifting hobby is another.)

The anthropology major has a history of helping other entrepreneurs succeed. She co-founded the Emergence Scholarship of The 网曝黑料 Trust. She also created the 网曝黑料 Tech Impact Fellowship to inspire women and students of color to consider technology careers.

The pandemic jolted many entrepreneurs and small business owners.

She had one client whose business centered around enrichment activities for after-school programs. The pandemic shut schools and childcare centers down. White helped the client turn his business into a virtual model. He started shipping the enrichment kits to clients and offering the activity lessons on Zoom. His once local business has since expanded to programs and families around the country, she said.

鈥淚t turned out to be liberating for him,鈥 she said.

She knows many businesses have suffered and failed during the pandemic and is grateful that hers is thriving. She offers this advice to other entrepreneurs, in good times and bad:

鈥淵ou always have to go back to that core value, that you understand your customers and the value you are adding to their lives,鈥 White said. 鈥淜now who your customer is, what kind of problem you鈥檙e trying to solve for them, and make sure it鈥檚 something they鈥檒l want to pay you for.鈥